San Diego, California, United States of America
PhilPapers Editorships
Michel Henry
  •  37
    Time, Technology and Globalization
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 11 (2): 45-56. 2004.
    People often talk that time changes everything. But what is perhaps more interesting is how cultural conceptions of time, which both construct and are constructed by social custom, are changing. In this era of globalization, with the phenomenal growth and power of the Internet, it appears that time itself is changing very rapidly. And this change has profound implications for the developing identities of local cultures. We would like to be able to show in this paper that time is also a victim of…Read more
  •  61
    Self-Awareness and Ontological Monism
    Idealistic Studies 32 (3): 237-254. 2002.
    Any convincing theory of self-awareness must do the following: (a) avoid what Henry terms “ontological monism” (OM), the belief that there is only one kind of awareness, namely, object-awareness; for as long as we stick to OM, we remain wedded to the reflection theory of self-awareness and its well-known difficulties (the infinite regress being the worst). And, (b) account for the concrete personal facts about self-awareness: familiarity, unity, identity, etc. First, I go through the tradition, …Read more
  •  9
    Towards a Heuristic Method: Sartre and Lefebvre
    Sartre Studies International 5 (1): 1-15. 1999.
  •  31
    Memory, History, Forgetting (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 59 (3): 675-677. 2006.
  • The Subject as Time: Merleau-Ponty's Transition from Phenomenology to Ontology
    In David Morris & Kym Maclaren (eds.), , Ohio University Press. 2015.
  •  21
    Cet essai met en cause la comparaison historique courante qui relie le traitement husserlien de la conscience du temps à la tradition philosophique occidentale par le biais du livre IX des Confessions d’Augustin. Je soutiens notamment que cette comparaison n’est valable qu’à l’égard des leçons sur le temps de 1905 (qui expliquent l’appréhension du temps par le recours à l’étirement de la conscience opéré par la mémoire) et non pour la théorie husserlienne ultérieure, que l’on peut dater autour d…Read more
  •  45
    Bergson’s theory of war: A study of libido dominandi
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 44 (5): 593-611. 2018.
    Bergson scholars such as Leonard Lawlor, Alexander Lefebvre, Philip Soulez, and Frederic Worms have recently argued that Bergson “places the phenomenon of war at the center of his analysis” in Two Sources of Morality and Religion. We want to contribute to this line of interpretation. We claim that Bergson’s account of the causes of, and solution to, the problem of war can be effectively understood in light of a central tenet of classical political philosophy, namely, the City of God, both the co…Read more
  •  876
    Grief: Putting the Past before Us
    Quaestiones Disputatae 7 (1): 156-177. 2016.
    Grief research in philosophy agrees that one who grieves grieves over the irreversible loss of someone whom the griever loved deeply, and that someone thus factored centrally into the griever’s sense of purpose and meaning in the world. The analytic literature in general tends to focus its treatments on the paradigm case of grief as the death of a loved one. I want to restrict my account to the paradigm case because the paradigm case most persuades the mind that grief is a past-directed emotion.…Read more
  •  41
    A 5,000 word review-essay of Anthony Steinbock's Moral Emotions (Northwestern University Press, 2014).
  •  51
    Bullshit as the absence of Truthfulness
    Methodo: International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 2 (2). 2014.
  •  56
    The Consciousness of Succession
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 83 (1): 127-139. 2009.
    For all its subtle differences, Husserl scholarship on time-consciousness has reached a consensus that Husserl’s theory underwent a significant interpretiveimprovement starting around 1908 / 1909. On this advance, which concerned the intentional structure and directedness of absolute consciousness, I have cautioned against reading Augustine’s theory of time as a philosophical predecessor to Husserl’s. In a recent “confrontation” with my efforts, Roger Wasserman tried to defend a reading of Augus…Read more
  •  25
    Bergson and phenomenology (edited book)
    Palgrave-Macmillan. 2010.
    Often neglected as an influence on phenomenology, Bergson's thought has resurfaced and brought challenges to phenomenology. In a series of original essays and translations, leading scholars of contemporary continental philosophy seek to redress this oversight and inaugurate a long over due dialogue and yet pertinent to the future of continental philosophy. This thematically focused collection reintroduces Bergson to the dominant discourse in continental philosophy (phenomenology), reevaluates ph…Read more
  •  71
    Cet essai met en cause la comparaison historique courante qui relie le traitement husserlien de la conscience du temps à la tradition philosophique occidentale par le biais du livre IX des Confessions d’Augustin. Je soutiens notamment que cette comparaison n’est valable qu’à l’égard des leçons sur le temps de 1905 (qui expliquent l’appréhension du temps par le recours à l’étirement de la conscience opéré par la mémoire) et non pour la théorie husserlienne ultérieure, que l’on peut dater autour d…Read more
  •  283
    The Object and Affects of Envy and Emulation
    Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory 14 (2): 386-401. 2015.
  •  21
    Dispossession: On the Untenability of Michel Henry's Theory of Self-Awareness
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 35 (3): 261-282. 2004.
  •  21
    Michel Henry: The Affects of Thought
    with J. Hanson
    Continuum. 2012.
  •  54
    Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Husserl and the Cartesian Meditations (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 45 (2): 257-258. 2005.
  •  363
    A Glimpse of Envy and its Intentional Structure
    New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 10 (1): 283-302. 2010.
  •  48
    [From the publisher]Taking the term “phenomenologist” in a fairly broad sense, Early Phenomenology focuses on those early exponents of the intellectual discipline, such as Buber, Ortega and Scheler rather than those thinkers that would later eclipse them; indeed the volume precisely means to bring into question what it means to be a phenomenologist, a category that becomes increasingly more fluid the more we distance ourselves from the gravitational pull of philosophical giants Husserl and Heide…Read more